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Nov. 5, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
02:18:46
BBN, Nov 5, 2025 – Mamdani victory, Ukraine-NATO defeat, and an amazing AI model...
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Okay, welcome to Brighton Broadcast News for Wednesday, November 5th, 2025.
I'm Mike Adams and in celebration of the great victory of Mamdani, now the new mayor-elect of New York City, I had to write a song.
I just had to put together a song about, you know, government-run grocery stores and price controls and free money and all kinds of stuff like that.
So let's give it a listen.
we go oh that's a dead burrows the waters count don't you know amy yeah baby yeah in the heart of the city under the neon light mom
donnie's in the mayor seat feels just right free money free money He chants with glee.
But he's forgotten the lesson of history's free.
Mom Donnie, oh, Mam Dani, you're playing with fire.
With your communist dreams, you're setting New York higher.
Price controls and freebies.
It's a recipe for disaster.
New York's future's at stake.
Don't let it be your master.
Grocery stores and government hands, foods in short supply, rent controls and free fares.
Oh, what a surprise.
Productive folks are fleeing, seeking greener pastures.
Leaving behind the takers in their tiring bastions Walk to reality's door Mamdani's policies will leave the city in a war.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No money for services.
No cops, no firemen.
New York will crumble like a house of cards, it seems.
Mamdani, oh, Mam Dani, you're playing with fire.
With your radical dreams, you're setting New York higher.
Yeah, yeah.
Bailouts and bankruptcy, it's a grim fate for the city that never sleeps.
It's too late.
So Mom Donnie, listen well before it's too late.
Learn from the past.
Don't seal New York's fate.
Free markets of freedom.
That's the way to go.
And New York will become a ghost town, don't you know?
All right, did you enjoy that song?
Yeah, just to tell you how I created that one.
I, well, I use our AI engine at brighttown.ai to write the lyrics.
I just gave it a prompt to write a bunch of lyrics out of some statements that I just put together.
Statements about, you know, government-run grocery stores and price controls and rent and free money and stuff like that.
So it came up with the verses and the chorus and everything.
And then I put that over into Suno, which I learned is actually pronounced Sunno.
I did not know that.
But anyway, everybody says Suno.
And then I had Suno whip this out with a prompt about using kind of a world beat genre with some Indian accented rap lyrics.
And that's what it, that's what it gave me.
Pretty good.
And the funny thing about this song is that for the first 10 or 15 seconds, it's spitting out just at the very beginning like craziness.
And nobody knows what they're saying.
I mean, let's listen to that right now.
Just the beginning.
Oh, yes or that, Burroughs.
So right there, the singer said, yes or that, Burroughs.
Like, nobody knows what that means.
No, that's talk about AI hallucination.
Yosa Dat Burls.
It's like, it just sounded good.
So I left it in there.
But it continues.
And then that was, what is cow, don't you know, whammy?
It's like, okay.
Whatever he said, you know, hey, it's Mom Danny.
We don't know.
It could be anything.
It's going to be a whole new experiment in communism in America.
So what is Beryl going down, Whimmy?
Whatever he said.
Who knows?
For some reason, it really fits the song, right?
So anyway, of course, we're having fun, kind of a little bit of Gallows humor because look, New York's going to be in real trouble with this guy in charge.
This is going to be a teachable moment, as we say, for the rest of America to watch what happens to New York City.
Because first of all, anybody who earns income is going to flee because otherwise it's all going to be confiscated by the government there in order to hand out freebies and money and benefits and everything, rent subsidies and free bus fare and food, whatever to all the New York City citizens.
So anybody who can flee will flee.
Some will flee to Florida.
I mean, this is going to be the, this is a tipping point for a lot of New Yorkers.
But there will be a whole lot of people who will stay there and say, oh, finally, we're going to have our utopia, our communist utopia.
Mom Danny won.
You know, they're going to be celebrating like they did when they elected AOC.
And then later on, they found out that she's just another warmonger like all of them, you know.
So at first, the people are going to say, we're saved.
We're saved.
Remember when how Americans cried and cheered when Obama was elected in 2008?
And they thought, who was that black woman saying, we're going to give free rent, going to give free everything.
He's going to pay for everything.
Oh, my God.
You know, celebrating.
Yeah, you're going to see that moment for New York City.
And that little emotional honeymoon won't last very long because reality is going to set in once Mom Danny takes the reins of power and New Yorkers find out they ain't no one left to pay the bills.
You know, I mean, who are you going to take money from?
Who are you going to take money from?
Wall Street's going to leave.
Wall Street's going to move to Texas probably.
Texas will be the financial center in a few years.
You're going to have this migration away from Wall Street.
All the billionaires are going to just ex-fill as quickly as they can.
If they haven't already put their money under some other jurisdiction, they're going to be leaving like crazy.
This is going to be gutting New York City, which is very sad for the good people of New York City.
But it's also, again, a lesson for the rest of America to watch this and learn, you know, don't try this at home because this is going to go horribly wrong.
I mean, you know, Eric Adams, he was more of a moderate mayor.
And he couldn't make heads or tails of New York City, really.
You know, he couldn't do much for the city.
Because there's no way out when a majority of your population demands that everything should be free and that government is your savior.
And they just want to tax everybody who earns anything, which, of course, causes them to flee.
So that's what's going to be happening in New York City.
We should watch this.
But it's along the lines of my prediction.
I said that I think the conservatives were going to get hammered pretty hard in the election yesterday.
And that's exactly what happened.
And if you're wondering why, and also what's going to happen in the midterms, think about this.
The New York people are suffering, like all Americans are suffering under Trump's tariffs.
Trump's tariffs are an economic disaster.
It's causing businesses to fail.
It's causing supply chain disruptions.
It's causing delays and it's causing parts to be out of stock.
It's causing all kinds of problems and business investment problems.
The tariffs are a disaster.
And the people of New York are feeling that.
Their businesses are suffering.
Their supply chains are suffering.
And on top of that, the government shutdown has how many, maybe a few million New Yorkers aren't getting food stamp benefits.
And you know they're going to vote for whoever promises them the most handouts, of course.
And that's not going to be Trump or any conservative.
That's going to be a Democrat or a communist or a Marxist who's going to give them the most handouts.
That's what they're going to vote for because they're hungry and they expect the free entitlements.
So New York City is not going to itself, I mean, the people of New York are probably not going to learn much from the economic collapse of New York City that's coming.
Because if they understood economics, they wouldn't have voted for Mamdani.
But they did.
He won over 50% of the vote, I believe.
I mean, he won more votes than Cuomo and the other guy together.
So the people of New York consciously chose Mamdani is what it appears to be, unless there was massive vote fraud, which is certainly possible.
But it looks like the people of New York chose Mamdani.
They chose his policies.
And that means they are economically illiterate, which means that when things go bad, they're just going to blame Trump.
They're not going to blame Mamdani.
It couldn't be his fault.
He's the hero.
He's the savior, right?
It's got to be somebody else's fault.
Well, who are they going to blame?
Yeah, they're going to blame Trump.
And Trump deserves some of the blame, yeah, for reasons I mentioned, like, well, all the money printing and all the wars that we're still involved in, the quagmire of war and the tariffs and some other things.
I mean, Trump deserves some of the blame, but Mamdani is going to take economic disaster to a whole new level for New York City.
It's going to be something to behold.
And I actually don't know when he gets sworn in.
When does he take office?
I think it's not far away.
So I bet you there's going to be a rush on U-Haul rentals out of New York City for the next six months.
And you're going to see businesses relocate like crazy.
Did you know that if you once lived in New York City, and then if you leave, the state of New York hounds you for years, wherever you go, they hound you and they try to claim that you're still a New Yorker and therefore you still owe taxes to the state of New York.
New York state tax authorities are some of the worst tyrants in the country.
And that's saying something.
In many ways, they're worse than the DC IRS enforcers, you know.
So they're going to be chasing people.
And anybody who wants to leave New York and change their tax domicile, if that's you, you need to document it.
You need to keep a journal.
You need to have copies of your air tickets.
Like, this is the day I left.
Never went back.
You need to make sure that the metadata on your phone doesn't show that you ever went back to New York.
Because if you did, if you go back to New York City one day, they can claim, oh, you're still a resident for the whole year.
What?
Yeah, they've done that to people.
So you need to make sure your phone never goes back and you never go back.
Otherwise, you could be taxed on all your wealth plus penalties and everything for trying to, quote, evade New York taxes by moving out of New York.
Imagine that.
All right, continuing the broadcast here.
Well, yesterday was the first day of our new studio, our new Brighteon studio being available for interviews.
And sure enough, I did some interviews.
And I'd like to show you a little bit of behind the scenes footage to help show you what you helped build through your support.
We were able to build this really incredible new studio that can handle a roundtable of people.
It's really pretty incredible.
Let me just show it to you behind the scenes.
And then today's interview, which you'll love, is an interview that demonstrates our Brighteon AI model running locally on a phone and on a laptop with no GPU.
The full model, the 12 billion parameter model that you can download on our site from Brighteon.ai.
Yeah, we're running it on a phone with no internet connection. That is being demonstrated in the interview coming up. Anyway, check out this little collage of some behind the scenes footage of our new studio. So this is the green room that we have in our new studio. Hey, Rody, how you doing? You
you, don't you? But it's not, I you. This is for our guests here. And we set up, what is that, a coffee machine? Plus, we have a smoothie bar here. This is where people hang out and wait while this is, these are just a bunch of our products here that we give people when they show up here. And
this is the new studio we're about to film for the first time today. And then hopefully it'll all go smoothly. We'll see. And then here is the kitchen area that we're going to use for upcoming videos about filming smoothies and recipes and things like that. Got a little fridge and a
working, allegedly this. Yeah, look, look, it is working. That's cool. We've got water and electricity for smoothies. So got a bunch of displays here. Got the new desk. Gonna have an in-studio guest today. You can see this is set up for multiple guests now. We can have people
here and on that side and in the front. Got all of our lighting set up here with all controllable digital controls. Got a U.S. flag and a Texas flag is about to get set up. So we are going to have loads of fun today. Thank you for all your support that allowed this to happen. We couldn't do it
without you. So this is going to be fun. Hey, Rody. Okay, giving you another look at the studio here. So now we've got this side screen on.
We've got different things going on over there.
We've got got the Texas flag and the American flag set up here and then behind here there's the this the smoothie studio and then here's another look at the at the main studio we have a a map, a world map on the wall back there. And then on the wall back there, that's actually a
Goldback collection. This is just some interesting 3D wall art that actually represents vocal, the are, this is a Utah Goldback collection. right here limited edition series and there's the authentication all of
it from 2019 so that's what the studio looks like and we're i just walked across the camera here's a part of the control room view and the window through which the studio and look there's roadie there ready for the show
so yeah we got a good setup here and uh can't wait to get started okay i hope you enjoyed that and today's interview is you know coming up that that uses this studio now i can't wait to show you some blending recipes in the kitchen the new you know the kitchen i showed you there
uh i guess we're gonna have to get some and pots and pans and ingredients and stuff like that we we we were feeling fortunate just to get the main studio up and running today so the kitchen is not up and running yet and then finally after all these years i promise i will demonstrate for you my daily smoothie so if you're wondering what are you drinking there you know i
talk about its avocados and it's bananas and it's turmeric and stuff like that i'm gonna show you that on camera coming soon you know i'm not gonna promise a specific
day but it's it's coming that's the first thing i'm gonna film can't wait okay covering some other important news today we've had a tragedy in the transportation industry in the united states and we've had a ups cargo plane crashed on takeoff it was out of the louisville muhammad ali international airport um it killed at least seven people i don't think all of them were on the plane and this plane i'm going to show you uh some
of the footage that's circulated not not because i'm i i like to gratuitously show explosions but rather to to indicate the point that this this plane was on fire as it was taking off like it was on fire before it got into the air so something went horribly wrong or i mean it it was still let's say it's still in the process of taking off it was clearly on fire so i think it's important to see that this is going to be obviously a deep investigation into this and you know prayers go out to the family members and survivors of all those who uh who who were killed or harmed this is a this is a huge crash so let me play this for you first it shows the plane taking off oh i want to say in advance this
video has profanity in it from the observers who are freaking out so i apologize for the profanity but let's let's take a look here we go bro get the fuck away from here like turn around Bro, hold on, hold on, hold on. I think it's gonna crash, bro. Holy shit! Holy shit! Holy shit!
Cam, they're dead.
They are dead, bro.
Now, this plane unleashed a massive amount of aviation fuel and a giant fireball that really stretched out horizontally across many, many...
buildings and a couple of parking lots and possibly civilians on the ground. We don't know the full extent of it yet. But this next video, which is 28 seconds, shows you in
much more detail that this plane turned sideways and was going horizontally very fast as it exploded into a giant fireball across the ground. So let's take a look at this video. All right, this is from a security camera in looks like maybe a storage parking lot. There's the plane turned sideways, obviously. All its fuel came out. Giant, horrible fireball.
The landing gear is still extended because it had just starting to take off, you know, or maybe it had obviously it's not very airborne. That crash does not look survivable to
me. So again, prayers. My goodness, what a horrible tragedy. Okay, and now this next video, this third video, which is 27 seconds, is showing you the extent of the massive fireball across the ground that really spread out. It looks like hundreds of meters as
the voices of the people in the car. One woman speaking Spanish reacting to this with obvious concern. But check out this video. Here we go.
now you you may be wondering what's the most likely cause of this of course we're going to defer to the ntsb and its investigation and so on. This is going to be probably a very long duration investigation. However, there are known problems with the MD-11 from McDonnell Douglas that are well known. And this is the predecessor of
the DC-10. And the DC-10 was a plane that, well, let me put it this way. A friend of mine who's an expert mechanical engineer, an expert in aircraft metal fatigue, he told me years ago that nobody retired the DC-10 airplanes. They just waited for
them to fall out of the sky. I mean, that was sort of the industry dark humor joke because DC-10s crash a lot. And you may want to know that the MD-11 has a known issue with what's called the flap hinge bolt assemblies. And these
assemblies have been known to fail because of fatigue. And metal fatigue is when metal is stressed back and forth, usually sometimes with oscillations and so on. And there can also be corrosion. And these can fail. And when they fail, the flaps can separate.
And then this causes something called uncontrolled rolling, uncontrolled rolling. Now there's a documented aviation accident involving a McDonnell Douglas MD-11F that describes this. And I don't know what year this was.
I can find. It says that the flight control malfunction was initiated by the failure of the bolt assemblies securing the left inboard flap outboard hinge to the wing trailing edge. I guess you have to kind of imagine that. The lower outboard nut failed first due to stress corrosion
cracking. The lower inboard bolt failure was initiated by fatigue and was completed by overloading following the failure of the nut on the lower outboard bolt. Okay. Kind of wish you had a CAD design program right now. It's like, okay, we got and bolts. The two upper bolts failed by overloading following the failure of both lower bolt assemblies. Then the failure of all four bolt assemblies allowed the
flap hinge to pull free from the wing trailing edge to drop and jam the left inboard flap at the fully extended position. The separating flap hinge pulled the components of the left-hand spoiler
of spoilers L1, L4, and L5. I guess you'd have to know the aircraft to know the positions of those spoilers. The deployment of three of the five left-hand spoilers caused the, get this, uncommanded left roll of the aircraft. That's exactly what we just saw in that video. It looked like an uncommanded left roll of the aircraft. Okay, so I'm not
this is the cause. It's too early. The NTSB obviously is going to investigate everything. It might be something totally different. But this aircraft is known to have stress fatigue failures that cause an uncontrolled left roll. But then again, this plane was on fire. So maybe this has nothing
to do with it. This plane was clearly on fire. And then maybe the fire caused bolts to fail, etc. But whatever it was, this aircraft is known to have some issues like this. These are documented by the FAA. And there's a reason why some of these aircraft that have, shall we say, not so great safety records, they're used for cargo,
not human passengers. So the one thing we can be thankful for today, I suppose, even though this is a tragedy and people died, at least seven people are now reported to have died. At least it wasn't, you know, a passenger plane. So let's keep that in mind that this was limited to a much smaller number of people. Again, I
don't know how many people died on the ground versus the flight crew. But clearly the entire flight crew probably did not survive, is my guess. This was UPS flight 2976. And I'm not in any way blaming UPS here. I don't, I mean, it's too early to even know whose fault, if this is anybody's fault. Maybe it's a bird
you know. Maybe it's a maintenance problem or a lack of maintenance. Maybe it's a freak stress fracture in the turbine. Maybe it's a defect in the manufacturing of the turbine for the left engine, you know. I mean, there's a thousand possible things. So we'll bring you additional reports on
this as we know what happened. But this was not a collision, not that I can see. It doesn't look like terrorism. You know, this looks a horrific, tragic accident that just left a giant burning hole for several hundred meters on the ground. Oh, there's actually one more video I want
the unbelievable ground devastation of this plane. I mean, you know, of the crash. It looks like we got hit by a missile or something, you know? It's a lot of
fuel on that plane. It was headed for Honolulu, so it had a big fuel load. But check out this video. Okay, and one more thing I am now seeing that there were three
crew members on board the aircraft. So since we know at least seven have been killed, that tells us at least four on the ground were killed.
So thank God for your life today, because at any moment, a giant burning, you know, a giant burning metal hunk, a giant ball of fire could just come out of the sky and kill you without warning, especially if you work near the airport.
So life can be really short.
Let's see.
Flight tracking data showed it reached an altitude of 175 feet, I see, and a speed of 184 knots.
Well, 175 feet is higher than what I thought it did, so.
okay, so by the way, we do use UPS as a it's very likely that UPS may ground some of its planes for additional inspections or a safety review or something like that. So just be aware that UPS deliveries might be delayed and have patience with that because it's better to err on the side of caution and public safety if there's an
this happens. You want to take a and all your aircraft. Obviously, that would be the responsible thing to do. And I think that's exactly what UPS will do. Okay, let's shift gears to another tragic topic, the ongoing war between Russia and NATO with Ukraine caught in the
middle as the proxy state. You may be aware that the city known as Pokhrovsk has been reportedly surrounded by Russian military forces. And there have been
desperate efforts by the Ukraine military and probably the CIA, probably NATO, to try to inject some special forces into that area to achieve a breakout escape. And that has failed. Reportedly, two Black Hawk helicopters tried to insert special forces units there and both helicopters were downed as I understand it right now but always take this with a grain of salt because you know
it's war. So these details might be sketchy. Now, what's shocking about this, you may wonder, why is Ukraine defending this town again, Pokrovsk, which has apparently a different name in Russian too? I'm not going to try to pronounce it. I can never really nail down these
names anyway. But what's being reported is that most Ukrainian troops have fled or evacuated from Pekrovsk, Pokrovsk, I think. And they've left behind, apparently, what's being claimed to be $500 million worth of NATO equipment and military property. And this is coming from, reportedly, from Reserve Lieutenant
Colonel Oleg Ivanikov. He said that the equipment that Ukraine failed to evacuate out of Pokrovsk is valued at $500 million, but who knows? Is he an equipment auditor? I don't know. How does he know how much it's worth? But that's what he's saying. And
then reports from various Telegram channels are stating that almost all Ukrainian units have withdrawn to a town called Mirnograd, Mirnograd, I guess. And that 85% of Pokrovsk is now under the control of the Russian military. And then there are additional rumors that claim that one of the reasons Ukraine is so desperate to extract,
you know, to open up an exit route, an evacuation route, is because there are U.S. soldiers that are caught by being surrounded by Russian military assets. And if U.S. soldiers or U.S. CIA agents are captured by Russia,
that would change everything about this war because Russia would be able to parade them on camera while they are confessing that they've been waging war against Russia as Americans. And then Russia would be able to use that diplomatically to claim, yeah, look, we are clearly under attack by the United States of America. You have U.S. troops there. You know,
people born in Kentucky or wherever they're from. And then Russia could use that to threaten military strikes on U.S. weapons factories
using their advanced new missile systems, such as the Burovesnik or the Oreshnik or even the fighter jet-launched Kinzhal hypersonic missiles or something else, because they've got a lot of stuff now. They have the Poseidon underwater drones also on top of that. So this is
looking very bad for Ukraine. It's not just the loss of troops and the loss of equipment and the loss of this key town, Pokhrovsk, which is a critical hub for distribution points, logistics, transportation, etc. But if the U.S. is caught up in this, then that's going to make it almost impossible for Trump and Putin to be able to talk and de-escalate this and find some peace. Because if the Russian people find out that the
U.S. has secretly been providing troops on the front lines, then peace looks like a remote possibility at that point. And maybe that's what Trump wants. I don't know. He doesn't seem to be that interested in ending the escalation with Russia. He keeps threatening Tomahawk missiles, but so far they haven't been delivered.
Even if they are, that's not going to change the outcome of the war. But let's see. The Russian forces a Black Hawk helicopter landing force, reportedly. Wow. And
the Ukrainian military command has refused to issue any order of withdrawal to the troops in Pokharovsk because they are saying those troops need to defend the NATO strategic assets which are located there in warehouses, you know, NATO equipment, etc. So this is looking catastrophic for Ukraine because they're going to lose Pokharovsk. They're going to lose the NATO equipment. They're going to
piss off all the NATO countries that donated that equipment. The Russians are going to parade this equipment all over the internet. It's going to be on RT, you know, it's going to be on Pravda. It's going to be everywhere. It's going to be on Sputnik. You know, it's going
And the U.S. already made a huge mistake in leaving, evacuating Afghanistan, leaving behind, you know, billions of dollars worth of equipment. Like, is this the military-industrial complex revenue model?
We get involved in a war and then we leave a billion dollars of equipment behind and then while we evacuate and just hand over all the equipment to the opposing party because that it seems like we do that a lot for some reason but i i guess we're gonna see all kinds of uh american equipment i wonder if it's gonna be patriot missile batteries i wonder if it's gonna be high mars low mars planet mars i i i don't know what it's
gonna be but russia is gonna rub america's noses in this and it's gonna be really embarrassing for trump you know more than usual so i look i've given up trying to predict
timelines on anything involving war because everything takes so much longer than i think it might on the battlefront and it seems like russia is intentionally sort of slow walking this whole thing they're not really in a hurry it looks like it's more like siege warfare
they're just trying to wait out ukraine so i don't i don't even know how long until pokhrovsk uh officially falls or if we'll ever even know that it does because probably ukraine will never admit it and the u.s will never report it and just be some telegram channels from russia that say yep we got the whole town we raised The flag over the, you know, over the center of the town, whatever, but nobody else is going to report it. So, you know, if
a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around to hear it, did it make a sound, right? I mean, that's the same thing. If Pokrovsk is captured by Russia, but the West never reports it, did it really happen? Well, we may find out soon. In any case, I am praying for peace. I'm praying for peace. I'm frustrated by all the war. I'm frustrated by the escalation. I'm frustrated by Trump's
continued support of both Israel and Ukraine's military effort right now.
And I care about the Ukraine people. I don't want to see more of them suffer and die. I just, the conflict, it's too costly. In human terms, too many families disrupted, too many lives lost, too much suffering. This is not okay. We do need to end this war. But, you know, on the same day that Trump says Putin should stop killing people, he turns around
and says, let's keep killing people in speedboats off the coast of Venezuela. So, you know, come on, Trump's not actually serious about stopping killing people. He just wants to kill different
people. It's still about killing people. So, you know, not good. Okay, I want to change the subject now and bring your attention to a report from Goldman Sachs. Now, this report apparently is
a global economics analyst report. It says, oh my goodness. Actually, you know what? I want to show you this because I'm not sure you're going to believe me. Well, I don't know. The graphic is kind of messed up, but take my word for it. Here it is. It's exhibit five. It says, from Goldman Sachs, it says that one-fourth of the current work tasks, it's talking
about white-collar jobs for the most part, could be automated by AI in the U.S. and Europe. And the chart is subtitled, The Share of Industry Employment Exposed to Automation by AI. And across all industries, it's 25%. So
25% of all jobs, not physical labor jobs, but I'm talking about healthcare support, talking about farming, computers and mathematics, what is this, business and financial operations, architecture, engineering, office administration support, and so on. Transportation, food preparation. Across the board, the average
is 25% of all human jobs can be automated by AI. And it's much higher in certain areas like office and administrative support. That's 46%. And then the legal industry, 44%. So, you know, close to
the people in the legal industry could see their jobs replaced. And then there's another table from this report, table three. It lists the top 40 occupations with the highest AI applicability scores. What that means is these are the ones that AI can most rapidly replace. And with a score of
72% are customer service representatives. And in the U.S., about 2.8 million people are currently employed as customer service representatives. And if 72% of those people are replaced, that's a massive number, right? I mean, it's close to, it's approaching, it's right around
2 million or close to it. So imagine 2 million unemployed customer service reps across America because it's all been replaced by AI. Writers and authors, the replacement percentage can be 85%. Yeah. And then for sales representatives that are selling services, which is 1.1 million people, that's 84%. And then interpreters and translators, 98%. In other words, the job of being an interpreter and a translator is now obsolete. It's done. Okay. Nobody needs human interpreters ever again because AI could just do it better, faster, cheaper, by far. So that's 51,000 people right there that are not going to have jobs, at least not as interpreters. Historians, 91% replacement coverage by AI. There are not a lot of historians, obviously because our country keeps repeating the mistakes of history. So nobody's really reading any history, it seems. But the historians that are out there, 91% going to be replaced. Okay. I mean, at least that's my interpretation of this. What else? Writers and authors. Oh, I already mentioned that. That's 85%. Mathematicians, 91%. Yeah, because AI can do math really, really well. Editors,
you know, like magazine editors, newspaper editors, yeah, 78% replacement via AI. I mean, that's the potential. Let's see, web developers, data scientists. I mean, it just goes on and on. Okay. Public relations specialists, that's a 63%. I mean, this, if you look at
this, you know, we're talking about, what is this going to be? It's like 5 million people that have jobs in America just on this list, about 5 million people who could be replaced at anywhere from about 65% to 98% replacement. Okay. So I'm mentioning this.
Oh, it says farm and home management educators also, if that's what you do. Broadcast announcers and radio DJs. Like nobody needs a radio we even have telephone operators? I did not even know that. Switchboard operators. What is this? The 1970s? Okay. Kind of an ominous chart from Goldman Sachs.
Now, I've got a special report that's related to this that I recorded earlier. And it says, the title is that AI cognition keeps plummeting in price while human costs keep rising. This is a very important phenomenon to pay attention to, that AI is getting cheaper and cheaper and better and better at the same time. So token costs are plummeting, but the quality of answers and reasoning and
problem solving from AI is skyrocketing. At the same time, human costs keep rising because the cost of living keep rising. The cost of healthcare keep rising dramatically. And more and more people are sick all the time because of all the vaccines that were pushed and the 5G and everything else, all the toxic pesticides and everything else. So people are more and more sick and needing sick days and needing hospitalization and
needing healthcare benefits, et cetera. And the AI machines, obviously, they don't take pharmaceuticals and they don't need hospital days, right? And they don't need health insurance. And so it's not difficult to see why so many corporations are replacing humans with AI. Even if AI isn't quite as good as the human, it doesn't have to
be. It just has to be approximately as good or almost as good, but 10 times cheaper. You see what I'm saying? So early on in this whole thing, a lot of, I don't know, a lot of naysayers were insisting that, oh, AI will never replace humans. AI can't do as good of a job. It doesn't have to. Although, in many cases, AI does a better job. But even if, even in certain areas, if a job, it
doesn't have to. It can do like 90% of the job for one-tenth the cost. That's enough of a business decision reason right there for most businesses to say, you know, fire 90% of the humans. Bring in, you know, sweep
a couple of humans to keep the machines in line. You know, just keep a couple of humans in case this thing goes full sky net. Or we'll keep a few humans to train And then as soon as the machines are as good as those humans, we'll fire those humans too. That's what's happening in corporations all across
America. And when you understand this trend, you will understand that, you know, AI cognition keeps getting cheaper and better. And what we're looking at right now is only the beginning. So this whole chart from Goldman Sachs, where,
an interpreter or a translator, that's already obsolete. Out of those 40 careers that Goldman Sachs listed, probably within two to three years, almost all 40 are going to be obsolete. It's going to be AI replacement of like 98% of most of those. And nobody's ready for this. Or very few people understand that this is
happening. Very few people. There's a lot of just, I don't know, see no evil, you know, cover your eyes like, it's not happening. It's not happening. La la la la la la la. Like it is happening. And people are losing their jobs all the time, every
And when they lose their jobs, they can't get new jobs. Getting a new job now is becoming freaking impossible for so many people. And so this is going to become a crisis very rapidly. I mean, a year from now, nobody will be in
And lots of people will be screaming for some kind of government assistance or something. This is going to accelerate. So I'm going to jump into the special report for you, followed by today's featured interview oh actually you know what i've got something else i have a i have a welcome message with the new studio just uh
giving giving you um like a thank you and a welcome to the new studio so we're going to play that it's like 10 minutes and i think you'll enjoy that i'm showing you around a little bit more of a tour of uh the camera angles and things i don't know we'll keep it short and then we'll play the special report and then we'll do today's interview uh before we do that i want
to give credit to today's sponsor, the satellite phone store at sat123.com. Satellite phones can be life-saving. They work when the power grid goes down. They work anywhere on the planet as long as you can see the sky. If you a phone call. You can receive a phone call. You the satellite phone store at sat123.com. I will not travel without
I don't know if a giant fireball is going to fall out of the sky or something right in my town. Who knows? You don't know. Anything could happen. So I I take a longer trip, of course, I most definitely have, actually, I have two sat phones for both networks. I
I have backups of the backups. So on a longer trip, I'll have two sat phones and the Bivi sticks for satellite-based text messaging. And also, I can deploy satellite bandwidth as well. The satellite phone store also works with Starlink. And they have very good deals on the Starlink systems for businesses at commercial grade speeds. It's blazing fast.
At times, I've had 250 megabits a second download off this system. It's amazing. Starlink123.com is the website where you can check that out. Starlink123.com. All right. With that said, enjoy the rest of the show. And I'll have another interview for you tomorrow. All right. Welcome, everyone, to the new Brighteon.com studios. I'm Mike Adams, and thank you for your
the week off last week in order to move to this new studio. And what I'm going to do is just show you around a little bit, show you some of the camera angles. And we're actually for the first time here today in the new studio. We're recording with guests. So let's see. Right now, that's camera one, straight-on camera, right? Is that what? Okay. Show, show, what's is camera two
the next camera? What is that? I don't know if they're in sequence. All right. So here's camera two. Yeah.
And what you can see in the background, that's going to be the smoothie. That's the kitchen set back there where we're going to do smoothie recipes and healthy food prep and things like that. So that's set up as a separate thing. That camera is for when I have a guest in studio, then we're going to sit on opposite sides of this massive table. And that camera is going to be actually on me when
I'm sitting over there. Okay, this camera four. There we go. Camera four, another angle. You can And also you can see the screen behind me. We're about to do an interview about this, what is it, a bio texture draft project. It's kind of interesting. So that's why that's on that screen. All right. So that's camera seven. And that's going to be for the guest. And we've got Hakeem coming in
a bub phone. We're going to have him as a guest here shortly. So that's the new studio. And it's not only is it a, I think it's an upgrade from what we had done before, but can also have a lot more people here around the table. And the table is more of a normal height. The old one we had was much higher and people had to kind
of like leap onto the high chairs. And that was an issue. And this is just a normal height desk now, it so much easier for all of our guests. So we couldn't do this without you. And I really do want to thank you for all of your support. We anticipate just doing hundreds of interviews in the coming year and also some events from this venue. And I
wish I could show you what's behind the camera that you're looking at because this is a 5,000 square foot facility that's dedicated to this effort. And what I'm looking at out there beyond the monitor is a future robot testing ground. So we're going to be acquiring robots in 2026 and then testing them. We're going to have robots out there attempting to do tasks. And it's going
to be a clown show, I anticipate for a while because I think the early robots are going to suck, actually. I think we're going to unleash Rody.
And there's Roadie over there. Rody's hanging out here as usual. We're going to unleash him on the robots and see if he can rip their arms off. And otherwise, if they survive that, we're going to see if they can shovel dirt and pull weeds and things like that. And maybe eventually fold laundry, although that's kind of a difficult task for robots. And I got to remember to keep looking at the camera there. I'm not even used to the camera
being where it is. So apologies to all of you watching if it's a little bit off. That's why I'm just not used to the current setup. But anyway, thank you for supporting us. And you can do so by shopping at healthrangerstore.com. Let me actually bring up the website. If you shop with us at healthrangerstore.com, here
we go. We have the computer screen working. Yeah, perfect. Okay. Then, of course, not only are you helping yourself with incredibly well-tested, laboratory-tested clean foods, nutritional supplements, and personal care products, etc., but then you're helping us fund projects like this. And not only is this studio, of course, funded by your support at healthrangerstore.com, but also projects like this, censored.news. And this project,
an AI-developed project, it not only does it list all of the news, it lists the news from all these, all the sites that we spider, which is about 80 sites now. You can see Children's Health Defense and Brownstone, anti-war.com and freight waves, etc. I mean, you can just go on down the list, but then it identifies the trends. So these are all the health trends right here that are identified right now. And you can click on food. Here's
so on. And you can click on finance, massive corporate debt binges, signal unsustainable AI bubble driven by central bank manipulation. There's a headline for you.
You can click on tech. You can get stories about robotics and AI and all kinds of things like that. And then we have a tab just on energy. For some reason, there's a in here right now. But that, well, oh, that's because that's the anti-methane feed additive, which is related to climate change insanity. Anyway, because of your support, we're able to fund and build sites like censored.news
and bring you really amazing analysis completely free of charge. Plus, we have our AI engine. And let me bring that up. Here it is, brightu.ai. If you go to brightu.ai, all you got to do is just ask it any question here. Like you can say, hey, what foods prevent diabetes? Or you can scroll down
the wellness coach, the financial coach, the ingredients analyzer, or the survival coach. And here you can click on other people's questions and answers. Like, here we go. Write me a poem about a a chimney sweep. Seriously, for his 67th birthday. Let's see what that said. Oh, in suit-stained overalls with a heart of gold, there's a man who stands tall, his story to be told, etc. So yeah,
it writes poems, it does food recipes, it answers questions about health and nutrition, food choice, ingredients, survival and preparedness, you know, all kinds of things. You can use that. It's completely free to use. Oh, wait, somebody asked it, are you Jesus? Let's see what it says.
you Jesus? No, I am not Jesus, it says. I'm an artificial intelligence designer to provide information.
See, our AI doesn't think it's Jesus. That's actually a good thing. Okay, so there you go. Use all of our tools and enjoy the new interviews here in the new studio. And thank you for your support at healthrangerstore.com. Again, we couldn't do any of this without your support. And we are just paying it forward, giving back to you in every way that we know with great content, great guests, great tools,
the AI model. Oh, go back to my screen. If you click here on the screen at the top, you see downloads right here. You can download our Enoch AI model completely free right here. This is our CWC Meestral Nemo 12B GGUF 4-bit quant. That will run inference on your local computer and you don't need any internet connection to make that work. So download that. It's completely free of charge.
We've released it for free, just as we promised. This is all being done, you know, on purpose. So thank you for watching. I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger. Take care. There's some very important trends in AI that you need to be aware of. And I know that not everybody is thrilled about this phenomenon. The fact that AI is rising so quickly and that it's replacing so many human jobs. It
has begun. It's accelerating. I don't know if you saw, but Goldman Sachs put out a new investigative that talks about the fact that about a quarter of all white-collar jobs can be replaced by AI right now.
And those are concentrated in areas like customer service or sales consultations, but also in areas like legal and journalism and engineering and architecture, etc. I mean, it's a shocking across the board analysis of how quickly
AI is going to replace human jobs. And again, I know that not everybody's thrilled about this. I know that it's scary for many people because you might be thinking, well, is AI going to replace my job? Well, my job, this is my job. My job is to help you not be replaceable. My
understand what AI is doing so that you can upgrade your own skills or your own qualities that AI can't touch. I want you to be successful. I want you to continue to earn income or pursue your passion or whatever it you do. And it's critical to understand what's happening in the world of AI in order to be
And I also think, by the way, as a side note, it's critical to use AI to enhance what you do. We're at the point in the job market, and I've said this before, if I were hiring, although I'm not, I'm not the HR manager of my own companies, I were, I would not hire anybody who wasn't using AI actively to do their
and says, oh, I'm the best middle manager. I know everything about this industry. I know how to do spreadsheets and inventory management, supply chain management, everything, but I don't use AI and I don't want to use AI. I will never use AI. I would say, well, then we can't hire you because there's no way that you're going to be able to keep up. It's impossible. You're going to have to learn AI to do your
job competitively. You know, someone saying right now that, oh, I don't want to use AI. It would be like somebody in 1997 saying, well, I don't want to use the internet. The internet's a fad. It's not going to last. We don't need the internet. I just do everything on Microsoft Word or whatever. It's like, if you don't use the internet, you're not going to
be relevant to the economy that is emerging. And the same thing is true with AI today. So what's the big trend that's happening that you need to be aware of? Well, there are a couple of them, but first, let me start with the fact that the cost of tokens is plummeting. So what are tokens? Well, tokens are representations of either words or images. Tokens are the unit of communication and also of the internal thinking of
So for the most part, we see language models producing words. Well, those words consist of tokens. And the tokens are what are represented in the large vector database, which is actually a massive multi-dimensional vector database that describes the relationships between words and tokens
based on larger context of potentially thousands of words and tokens. And I can't go into all the details of transformers and how it all works, and I don't even know how all of it works. But all you need to know is that tokens are what the language models are generating. When they're outputting text or they're outputting images, they are essentially creating
tokens, or you could sometimes say they're using tokens. All right. Now, every graphics card can only produce so many tokens per second.
And although this varies, a lot of language models today might produce 25 to 75 tokens a second, let's say. That's pretty typical for a relatively high-end prosumer graphics card running a common language model. Now, the bigger your language model gets, that is, the larger the parameters are, and some models are 70 billion parameters or
more, the slower the models get. And then they can produce fewer tokens per second. Whereas smaller models, such as a 7 billion parameter model, which is very common, a 7 billion parameter model can produce tokens very quickly. And that's why running a smaller model is less expensive per token because the tokens come out faster. All right, now, the trend is that the cost of tokens is plummeting. Over the last two
years, the cost to produce tokens is just plunging so much that tokens are getting so unbelievably cheap that users of AI models are finding that they can just sort of throw
and burn a bunch of tokens and get a much better answer. And one approach to this is called recursive reasoning. It's where you tell a model to take its own answer and then to reprocess that answer as a new
input and then to rethink about that and refine it and maybe correct it if it's off base. And by looping like a feedback loop of the AI model's own output, looping it back into itself, again, that's
you can burn a bunch of tokens and get a much better answer. It turns out that AI models are just so-so with a one-shot answer. A one-shot answer means like, this is my first answer. You know, it's kind of like walking up to a person and saying, you know, what's the capital of Argentina? You know, and an answer because not everybody knows that. I
the capitals of most countries around because it's just not important. I can look it up if I have to, right? But if you give a one-shot answer, it's not as good as if you think the answer. Like, wait a second, let me think about this. Or you can
a better answer. That's true with humans. And it's true with AI models. And so more tokens means better thinking, better output. And the reason this is critical, as the cost of tokens is plunging and as the number of tokens thrown at
projects is rising, it allows AI models to more effectively replace the cognition of humans. That's why the human replacement curve is accelerating because tokens are getting cheaper, but the cost of human cognition is not getting cheaper. So the cost
of human cognition, if you were to think about a person's output in a work environment, think about what the person does. Oh, person's writing emails. The person is, I don't know, moving around and spreadsheets and entering numbers and reading this and trying to understand that and writing reports, whatever they
If you think about that as using tokens, the human brain is a really amazing model of neural networking and intelligence, but the cost of the human tokens is not going down. It's still about the same. The human employee needs a salary, needs health care, needs time off. Actually, you know,
most of the 24 hours, that person is not working at the office, obviously. That person needs vacation days, sick days, etc. And then when that person is actually at work, they're shooting the breeze at the coffee machine with the co-workers or whatever. The actual number of productive hours in a typical office day
or three, maybe four if you have a really well-run office. And that means that human tokens are incredibly expensive and incredibly slow. Whereas machine tokens are getting cheaper and cheaper and faster and faster. And I know, I know some of you are going to say, well, you can't reduce humans to tokens. They're not robots. Humans bring something special. They have innovation and creativity and inspiration and compassion.
And yes, that's true, but that's I mean, most companies hire workers to function as automatons. They want you to be a thinking machine. They you process these reports. Or what was the joke in that movie, The Office? Was it the T the TPI reports or whatever? It's like, we need the TPI reports. Nobody ever knew what those were. Just some
paperwork garbage. Well, most jobs require humans to become machines. Most employers are not rewarding humans for your humanity. They're not saying, oh, we love your creativity. We love your vision. No, produce the TPI reports.
That's the issue. So if you're lucky enough to have a job where you get to be creative and you get to express your innovation, hold on to that job because those are pretty rare, actually. And those will be very difficult for AI to replace. Whereas the more automated jobs, oh, here's a spreadsheet, you know, or here's a stack of grant applications, you know, process these grant applications.
Oh, my God. You know, that's turning a human into a machine to process the grant applications. Well, that can be done by machines more cheaply and usually with better accuracy.
So cheaper tokens for machines, but more expensive tokens for humans. So what do you think employers are going to do? They're going to cut the humans.
And that's exactly what's happening. And you got to understand, human tokens are not going to get cheaper. But machine tokens will continue to get lower and lower in cost. I And machine tokens are going to get faster. And at the same time, the quality of the machine output continues to improve dramatically. And this is not a linear progression. This
is an exponential increase in the functional intelligence of AI models. I mean, we're in the middle of an intelligence explosion that very few
humans can even properly understand. They're just not tracking it. It's hard for humans to understand exponential phenomena, but that's what this is. And as a result, it's going to have runaway intelligence so incredibly rapidly
that even CEOs of corporations are going to find themselves answering to the AI rather than commanding the AI. Yeah, that's going to happen pretty rapidly.
So the only way to make human tokens less expensive and higher quality is for humans to work for less you know fewer benefits etc or for humans to upgrade their skills and their knowledge especially domain knowledge in your particular industry so that your output or that is you
your thinking, is higher quality than AI. And for the moment, that's possible in many areas, but that's not going to continue to be possible very soon because AI will have more domain knowledge in every domain. AI will be
the smartest entity in the room by far. And compared to AI, every human will look like an idiot. And so in 2026, you're going to see a horrifying acceleration of layoffs of human workers.
Now, it has already begun here in late 2025, but it will only accelerate. And it will absolutely surprise many people who have been in denial about this. And the thing that's different about being laid off or fired from your job today compared to any other time is that it's now extremely difficult to get another job. Extremely difficult. Whereas, you know, previously, especially
an engineer, let's say, who got laid off from Amazon or Google or whatever, they could go out and get a new job pretty easily because they've got a skill set. You know, they learned how to code. They know a lot of things. They've got value to a lot of tech companies, et cetera. They would go out, look for
in a matter of weeks. Today, the people that get fired, they are looking for jobs for months. And in some cases, people have been looking for jobs for over a year. And you're seeing a sense of desperation set in for a lot of people. For example, you're seeing people launching GoFundMe, fundraising donations, online begging is really what
that is, begging for money to be able to continue to live, to You're seeing more and more of that. And in some cases, people who have very accomplished college degrees. And in this economy, by the way, it turns out that having a degree from a university is not necessarily any kind of a significant advantage. It's just that that's almost irrelevant at this point
in many areas, or maybe most areas. Because again, everything that a person learns in college is already known by almost every AI engine. Every possible thing that you could have learned from your college books. Well, all those textbooks have already been read and ingested by AI. So
and less relevant to the workplace. Maybe for a long time, it hasn't been relevant because of all the woke universities and things So you're going to see a wave of unemployment that you have never seen before, not in our lifetimes. And in time, it will exceed the Great Depression. You're going to
see unemployment rates first at 25% and then 50% and then even higher in certain sectors. You're going to see, now, now labor will be safer for many years to come because robotics is difficult. But cognition, which is what I'm focused on here, and tokens in the workplace for desk jobs, white-collar jobs, et cetera, you're going to see unemployment rates in some areas like
or 80%. For example, customer service. You will see 80%, this is my estimate, 80% of current customer service jobs that are conducted by humans will be replaced by AI. And probably that number will be even higher, but I'm being conservative, just to say only 80%. So four out of five
those people are going to be looking for jobs where are they going to go well you can't drive an uber because all the taxis are going to be automated in the coming years or you can't drive an uber for long maybe for a year or two and that's about it so what are you going to do well society is going to have to address this question because it's a
massive, a massive issue. Widespread unemployment, massive defaults on consumer debt, which includes home loans, car loans, medical debt, and student loans, etc. This is going to collapse financial institutions. This is going to cause widespread homelessness. And
this is going to drastically reduce consumer purchasing behavior, which will dramatically impact online e-commerce giants like Amazon and also retail outlets like, I don't know, Home Depot and Best Buy and whatever. This is going to upend everything in our economy. And almost nobody is ready for this. And very few people realize it's even happening. Everybody's in denial. And that, you know, denial is
just not going to work. So people had better get a grip on this. Anyway, you can use our AI engine. It's completely free of charge. And it's available at brightu.ai. That's the word bright, followed by the letter u.ai, brightu.ai, and it can help you with lots and lots of things. So take
all the latest censored news and we do news analysis trends, emerging trends, all kinds of things at censored.news. So check that
out. And thank you for listening. I'm Mike Adams here. God bless you. Praying for all of you to have success in this new economy. Adapt, learn, train. It's going to get very difficult for a lot of people. So be prepared for that. Thanks for listening. Take care. I can't believe all the things that this model knows about. It's mind-blowing. The
questions you can ask it, it's something that you don't want online anywhere. And I can't promise if you use this on Windows what Microsoft knows about what you're asking Enoch, right? Because that's what you've done. You've given the people a gift of knowledge. If you download it, you have it forever. You can put it on the thumb drive and put it in your vault, you know? Yeah. In case they try to outlaw independent AI.
Welcome to today's interview here in the Brighteon.com studios. I'm Mike Adams and I'm joined today by Hakeem from Above Phone with some breakthrough announcements of the integration of our AI engines with his phones and laptops. It's special hardware that's all privacy-based, completely de-Google-fied. And welcome, Hakeem, to the studio today. Mike, it's good to be here. What an awesome new
space you've got. Hey, you are the very first person to be here in our new studio.
So we're just honored to have you here. Thank you. Yeah, I'm glad to bring it down and give it my blessing. I feel like I need more stuff. We've got so much desk space. We have a ton of desk space and there's this chasm here between us that is filled by a reason for this, but we can have, like, you can bring another guest sometime. You know, we can have multiple people here.
But it's lots of space for you and your phone. We are so excited about this. We've been, I think, I think we have been next to having a download for the past six months. And my team has been really antsy, right? Because we worked with Phi or Neo, the previous model, and we were
like, okay, this is good. And then we're like, when is that new model coming out? And I've told them, you have to understand, guys, it's be patient because tuning takes time. Yeah. And we don't know what's going on in the back end, but since we've been testing it over the past week or so, we see why, right? It's just the end result is so worth it. I can't believe all the things that this model knows about. It's mind-blowing. Okay, so let me just back
up for the audience. So you're talking about our new model, which is the, I mean, it's Brighteon.ai, which forwards to brightu.ai. And there you can click on the downloads page and you It's a GGUF file, so you can run it local inference on your local GPU.
a 12 billion parameter model, by the way. And as you know, we spent two years on the data curation pipeline process and then over a year trying to get a standalone model that would behave correctly, which was extremely difficult, way more difficult than I thought. But you've been testing it and it's on your products now and everything that you ship now, the Brighteon editions ship with this model pre-installed, correct? Yeah, and it's actually special
for anyone who follows you right now, but we want to open it up. I mean, the response has been so incredible. We've told some of our other customers about it and they're like, how can I get the Brighteon a guide for them. We're publishing it internally. That's cool. So right now it's exclusive to Brighteon, but I think we're going to see a future, right? Because this is one flavor of it. This is just one, you know, it's a base prompt. There's so many directions where you can take this thing, and that's what's exciting.
You could have a home assistant, you could have a herbal assistant, just the way you have on BrightLearn's chat system.
Oh, yeah.
Well, if people go to brightu.ai, we have a wellness coach and we have a financial coach and we have a survival coach.
coach. But that's for people watching, that's all just the model. It's all built into the model with special prompting. So you or with your products, AbovePhone and Above Book. Can you just give out the website where people can get the special Brighteon page? Yeah, it's abovephone.com/slash Brightian. And once you go there, so we've got the special Black Friday sale, which we'll get into it.
But this is the biggest sale of the year. We don't ever discount it.
We're usually waiting for this part of the year. So this is the best time to get it. And so we've got lots of our laptops and phones. And actually, is so big and so impressive, only the newest generation phones can run it. True. Which sounds like a bad thing at first, but it's not because you need this much raw horsepower to run this model, right? That's a really good point. It's a 12
billion parameter model. And the base that we started with that we modified is Meestral Nemo 12B. And I just want to say thank you to the Meestral company out of France, who they've done extraordinary work in creating this base model. But like all base models, it was very strongly sort of pro-pharma, pro-vaccine, pro-official government narratives and
everything. So we mind wiped it basically and we reworked it. So can you demonstrate this model running on the laptop without any the way? You don't need a $5,000 graphics card. That's right. I mean, these computers are affordable. It's using the CPU on the computer already. So I do encourage you, even if you're at home, you don't need an above book or above phone, but
the things that this model knows about, the questions you can ask it, it's something that you don't want online anywhere. And I can't promise if you use this on Windows, what Microsoft knows about what you're asking Enoch, right? Because that's what you've done. You've given people a gift of knowledge offline, anywhere, anytime, without them knowing. But if you're using it on a platform that can see what you're typing on your keyboard, you might have problems. Like Windows, because Windows is spyware. Yeah. Windows is spyware.
It's spyware. And Windows can track all your files. It can track because even just lately, Windows, YouTube's been taking down the videos that show people how to bypass the login when you first set up Windows 11. That's right. Right.
So you can no longer run it anonymously. So it knows who you are. It's got your Microsoft account, which is tied to your name and possibly your credit card number, et cetera. Windows is spyware. But what you ship is a special OS based on Linux that is completely private. And could you demo this a
little bit? Absolutely. Yeah. Can you guys see it on screen all right? Show, yeah, there we go. We can see your screen. Okay, so we it took us some time to like any great work. It takes time to do these things.
We built our own operating system because we just weren't happy with the different options out there. So this, it took a bunch of lessons from Windows. It took a bunch of lessons for Mac. So it has the beautiful features and gestures of Mac. Like you can swipe through and you can have multiple desktop. You can see
all your windows. There's really a bunch of amazing features and customizability. It's actually really cool. We started to give these computers to homeschoolers and they come back to us and they've customized everything.
And it's like, how did you do this? And they're like, nah, I wanted to do it my way. So it's really cool to see that. And it ships with a full suite of like a word processor, a spreadsheet, everything. It's all included. That's right. And you know, that's what's exciting about this here. I've got this presentation that I'll put up on screen here. But what is really cool is in the future, as we integrate this AI more into our
different services, you'll be able to, there we go. See, this is ignore that there. But so this is really cool. This is a software called OnlyOffice. It's included on the above book. And this is Microsoft format documents without being attached to Microsoft.
So now you don't got to pay them $99 or how much it ever is a year, right? You're using the same types of documents. You've got the same types of formulas.
And so that's great.
So I do all of my work from this.
Everyone at the company, you can make PowerPoints, you can do Word documents, and now you can combine it with AI.
Oh, yeah.
So show us, first of all, can you show us just local inference using our AI model?
Absolutely.
So I've got BrightU, Mistral, Nemo, the model loaded up here, and you can start just asking it right away.
I have...
And I want to be clear for the audience, you're not using our website for this.
You're using this engine.
Are you running...
Well, what's the inference software that you're running? So this is a local LLM studio called Jan AI. Okay. What's going to be on the above books? Okay. And So what you're about to show people, they can do this offline when they're not connected to the internet. That's right. You can be completely disconnected from the internet. There's no telemetry. You can turn
so this is what you get. You import the model. So by the way, if you get above phone or above book, you really don't have to do anything. This is kind of what you do. You hit the super key that used to be And then you type in Jan, and there it is. And you can run Jan. And then from here, you create a new thread. It'll already be loaded up for you. We have automations that do all this stuff for you. And
then you can just ask it questions like, hey, fuel prices are driving me crazy. Is there any way I can augment my vehicle for better gas mileage? Any fuel replacement I can use? Okay, let's see what happens here. That's an interesting question. And that's what I've been doing the past week. I've really been testing
your, because what you told me is, yes, we trained this on millions of books. Well, wait, no, not millions of books. It's 10,000 books, but it's hundreds of millions of pages of other types of content. Excuse me, I'm getting it mixed up. That's a lot of books, though. Yeah, 10,000. But it's 10,000 books I personally selected. And then it's hundreds of millions of pages of everything from transcripts
to science documents to website articles. There's millions of website articles that are included. And so you've got really, really good websites with great content. There's GreenMet Info, which I use personally too. Shout out to Sergi. Yes. There's Alex Jones, who he's got a really good historical account of everything that happened. But I think the books you chose too, I just remember being
impressed because there were books from like 100 years ago, right? Some of them. Yeah, a lot of them that we did, I mean, thousands of books that are basic preparedness and gardening and survival, building shelters, preserving food, diagnosing garden plant problems, soil problems, et cetera. So we did a very heavy focus on being able to live off-grid. See, I mean, my idea was that somebody could get your
notebook computer here, your laptop, with the model on it.
And if World War III happens or something, the internet goes down, maybe, you know, hopefully not, but the power grid is not reliable. Who knows what happens to Bitcoin? Brownouts, you know.
Don't have it for a week or so. But you just, you open up your laptop and you've got the world's knowledge at your fingertips built into this model. Exactly.
And that's what we have today. This is not like a future thing. It's like today. You can have it now. You can have it now. You can start using it now. I guess recommendations I have for people. So, I mean, look, it's all. How's the answer going on there? It's going pretty well. It's still working on 0.3, but it's already saying that the internal combustion engines can be
for superior efficiency and wow these methods have been independently validated to increase mpg by 20 to 40 percent in some in most vehicles okay now i want to comment on the speed here this model on on the laptop it's running there at about like six tokens a second or something like that which is acceptable for an offline situation with no special hardware but you
for people watching, you can also, you can download this model and you can run it on a GPU if you wish, and it will blast 30, 40, 50 tokens a second, depending on your GPU. So on the laptop, you just have to have a little more patience. And same thing with the
That's right. Yeah. Usually what I do if I'm working at home, I ask it a question, I work on something else, come back five or 10 minutes. By the way, this is one thing we want to chat with you about is how to make a plug-and-play extended GPU. They have those separate GPU units now. Yeah. It'd be so easy, right?
You put on your desk, plug a wire, and it starts to use it. We've played around with it. It works. I would guess that the issue there is the memory bandwidth between the GPU and the main a bridge it needs to be able to. Yeah. But if all the computation could be done in the GPU and then brought back, that would be very
viable. But again, for the purpose, what this is, it's incredibly practical and usable. And So what kinds of questions have you been asking it over the last couple of weeks? So I have been asking questions that I don't know the answer to or that I wouldn't know where to begin searching on the internet from, or
I'd be kind of scared to search the answer on the internet. I wouldn't want that in my search. And I run a private search engine. And still, so that just tells you kind of what you can achieve with this stuff. So I've been asking it how far, this is a good question here. I think that can run in the background. And so I asked, what's the, this was the other day, I asked, what's the
a city during a societal collapse? And suggest five reasons in the regions in the US that would be good candidates for relocation. Okay, yeah. And very practical. Yeah, I mean, it says the optimal distance is 100 to 250 miles. Reduced exposure to EMP risks, lower likelihood of forced relocation during
martial law scenarios. Yeah. We trained it on a lot of sort of doomsday scenarios. So, I mean, because it's supposed to help you sort through these things. And a really good answer. They are. I've had so much feedback on this model. People are just blown away. It is funny because we launched the model first online.
it actually is online. And when it was online, people were saying, well, that's easy to make it say in the standalone version? Like, it's coming. It's coming. It's coming. And then when we released the standalone version, some of those same people were like, whoa, it really is the same standalone
as it is online. You know, that's pretty rare nowadays for someone to promise something like that and to deliver it without asking for anything in return. I just want to thank you for putting this out there. This is a gift to humanity. Kind of rare to see that. Some people would put it behind the paywall, but you just said, hey, join, give me your email and you can use it. Yeah, even you don't. Well, I guess you do have
to just put in your email address, which is free. Free. And then you can download the model. You can use it unlimited online or offline. But yeah, look, I mean, we're all in this together. This is a fight for the future of humanity. And part of my mission is to reach a billion people and hoping that we still have a billion people by the time we can achieve that because of depopulation and everything. But I want to reach a billion people with knowledge about how to uplift their lives, better health, better
nutrition, better, more liberty and freedom, how to decentralize all of it. The only way to do that is to build something like this, give it on your laptops and your phones. And let me give out the address again. It's abovephone.com slash Brighteon. Is that right? Abovephone.com slash Brightian. I'll actually put it on my laptop here.
Okay. Abovephone.com slash Brighteon. And that shows you then the already discounted laptop and phone, well, the above book and the above phone, which is completely we need to talk about that for the phone. You're also going to be able to demonstrate this on the phone too,
That's right. Everything that we're doing on the computer, it works the same way on the phone. It's just a little tad bit slower. The phone has stuff running in the background. So I'll show you that. And while we wait for that web page to load, I just want to point out too, I missed this in its answer. It actually said, there's being too far from a big city, which is cool. I've never heard that before, but too far, but then you won't be able to get access
to a midwife. So there you go. You know, got to be a natalist and keep that birth rate up. So cool. And then also the I asked earlier, it's still working on it. It's done with the first section here. And yeah, I mean, it's got a good overarching response to
it. Keeping your engine clean, tuning your engine, using an engine warmer. It even gives you tips on how to drive. I don't know which book it's pulling this from.
Well, and just also, let me just mention to any book authors who are concerned about AI, this cannot reproduce your book. That is not how it works. This is aggregating knowledge across all the content. And so it's an amalgamation of what people teach in books or articles or transcripts or interviews. And
it's been trained on our interviews, for example, right? Everything that we've ever done. It's in there. It definitely knows about it. It's not like ChatGPT where you can ask it about Harry Potter and I'll give you the book. No, no, we don't do.
I think, is going out and fetching the book and then feeding that into the answer. Isn't that crazy how they pirated all these books and content? Anyways, that's why they've been sued by hundreds of publishers because they would just reproduce New York Times articles word for word. Yeah. Which is not stealing.
That's plagiarism. Yeah. But our model doesn't do that. Yeah. Yeah. And also we don't charge for it. And you're in church. It's completely non-commercial. It's released from our nonprofit organization. And yeah, we ask people to use it in good faith, but also verify all critical facts because every AI model can hallucinate. And especially they hallucinate names
or dates or things like that. Like if you ask it, tell me about 20 really awesome books on the topic of herbs or something. It'll give you 20 book titles of what it thinks the books should be. Some of them might be real. Others might be great ideas for books. This is kind of fun. This is cute. But if you do ask it about people, I would say that's probably its weakest it thinks everyone is Mike Adams. Oh, does it?
Yeah. It's like, who's Hakeem Anwar? He is the founder of Natural News Outlet, Independent Publishing, and he's been censored. I'm like, wait a minute. I will take that. I that's great. Well, it's funny because I was on Grakipedia from Elon Musk the other day. Yeah. And it was given the history of natural news and Mike Adams. And overall, it's pretty good, but it was hallucinating another
a second one. Who's no longer living? So definitely a hallucination. But you're right, because names can be very common. And since we trained this model on all of my articles and all of my interviews, it's seen my name millions of times. It's a little bit over. I wouldn't say it's
a bright in AI. And that's one of the trade-offs. But it would be a lot more training, like specialized training to know about people. But it's just kind of knowing it's like once you work with this model, you'll know what it's really good at. Well, and just to say, our focus was not people at all. Like
I didn't intentionally train it on anything about Mike Adams or anybody else. Everything that it picked up is from the content. We wanted to train it on knowledge areas that would help people be more free and be healthier and how to reverse chronic degenerative disease and grow your own food and things like that. So everything else is just sort of incidental
the primary training purpose. But what we're doing right now, Hakeem, is we're processing tens of millions of science papers that we're classifying them and we're scoring them based on whether they are areas of interest that we have, such as phytochemistry, nutrition, disease reversals, spike protein, things like that. And the new version of this model that will come out in 2026 will have the addition of tens of
that should really expand its knowledge base that that's amazing like this is not just a static thing it's out no it'll evolve over time and also you you made a really good point like your use of it will also evolve over time true and that's cool because i find that um i was very skeptical for for a long time just knowing what I know about surveillance.
It took me two years to really start working with I said, hey, I want to build this thing. Let's see how fast it can build it. Next day, it was built. And I was like, oh my God. So I came around and I think that people should ask themselves, like, am I just being a Luddite? Because we know AI data centers are everywhere in the
is an infrastructure being rolled out that is supposed to surveil everyone. They want to ask us natural language questions about where we were, what we were doing. Where is our AI infrastructure? So we really need stuff like this. Right now, it's a bunch of laptops running writing AI. And that's fine. This is just the start. Right. And remember, the government can't surveil this. No one can censor it. They can't take it away from you. No one can regulate this model out of existence. You download it, you
have it forever. You can put it on a thumb drive and give it a friend. Yeah. Or put it in your vault, you know, in case they try to outlaw independent AI.
Which is not out of the question. No, that's a possibility. And it might happen if this becomes successful. So, again, just if you're watching at home, you haven't downloaded it. Why haven't you downloaded save the file even if you don't know how to use it yet yeah yeah god forbid anything happens to look now it's talking about wood gasification oh yeah produce it to produce synthetic gas right on that's nuts and and so like you know one thing i like noticed
when when using this ai it's important to if i ask it about how to produce synthetic gasoline it would tell me which is crazy right i'm not i'm not a trained chemist. I probably shouldn't do that, but it will tell me and it'll give me a jumping off point where I could search on the web or search deeper. So you have to know, like, don't take it word for word, but it's going to tell you generally
how to do things. It's a research tool. Yeah. Yeah. And I mean, it's like any other information. You need to apply common sense to what you're going to do here. You me we're not going to get some wood and try and gasify it right now? Well, I mean, you could. That's actually a pretty big project and it doesn't pay off in terms of gas is cheap right now. But for self-reliance, that could
make a lot of sense. Yeah, this is so this is really cool. Cool. And then we've got, so it's finishing up the answer now: herbs on news, natural news. So yeah, this is this is super, super great. Guys, I've used a lot of AIs over the years. Nothing even comes close to this because to feed you their content or their agenda. This one's trying to teach you.
So from the perspective of an educator, this is just a gift. This is how we get through. Speaking of an educator, you can also ask the engine to build a any topic. So that's the best way to do that is to have a two-step plan. So first you ask it to build an outline of a course. You could do it right now. You could
say, I want to learn about, let's say, first aid herbs. How about that? And I want you to first create, are you typing this in? Yes, I will. First, create a course outline for a comprehensive course on using herbs for first aid, let's say. And then let's just watch it output the outline of the course. This is going to change everything about education, folks. I mean, this,
you know, pre-packaged courses, that whole industry is frankly, it's about to become obsolete because you'll be able to ask AI, especially engines like ours that are so heavily trained on these topics. You'll be able to ask the AI engine to create a course for you on anything that you want to learn.
And then as you walk through the course, you can even ask it to modify the course. Or you can say, I want to strengthen this area. Give me more details about this area. Or I don't quite understand this chapter. Tell me about this. It's interactive. It's an interactive learning tool. It blows, you know, textbooks and search engines out of the water. We're not just saying that, you know, it does. And this is why
China has their new AI Plus plan. They are mandating that AI be used in all academic areas from universities to primary schools. And look, say what you want about China, but they kind of know what they're doing in STEM. And you know what's interesting about Chinese culture is they really embrace AI in China at every level. Whereas in America, we have a lot, just a
know if that's because we all saw too many episodes of the Terminator. Well, it depends on the generation, right? Yeah, true. Good point. Yeah. It's the older, the older generation are very much afraid of AI and they're rejecting it, but the younger generations are all into it.
I blame War Games, Minority Report, all those movies. Yeah. And anytime we can blame Matthew Broderick, you should definitely try that. Yeah. So, so it's so, so, So I asked it, hey, please create me
the answer short because I kind of wanted it to be concise, which you can do that. You have control over every aspect of this. And I said, we're going to expand on the parts of the course later. So like, it's literally, you could give it, a I didn't quite see the screen there.
Is it generating the course outline now? Yes. So great. There are the first section is the foundational principles of first aid, the definition and scope. Perfect. Historical context. I just can't read it from here because my monitor is really far away. Yeah. And just let me know if it's not big enough, I can try and increase the size on the screen. Then it's going into the second section: essential herbs for immediate first aid, wound care and infection prevention. That's
And this model knows everything about herbal first aid. I'm pretty impressed. Yeah. Like everything that you could imagine that's ever been written about herbal first aid, this model has seen it. You'd see it's one of its specialties. It's probably number one. Absolutely. Absolutely. There's no question. I mean, compare it to Grok, compare it to ChatGPT, compare it to Gemini. There's no comparison. So imagine, so here it's giving you a list of
these. So we've got wound care and infection, pain and inflammation relief, respiratory support, digestive emergencies, cardiovascular and circuitry support. You know that there is going to be a demand for these things. And then you could go on somewhere like freeheirloomseeds.org, which I already have up, and you can check it out. Like they have a list of seeds from A to B. Let's see if any of them are on here. Let's look for time. Thyme, there you go.
And you can request seeds from these guys are great. They'll send you seeds a teaspoon. Right now, everyone should be thinking about what do I need to prepare? Can I make a business out of this? Can I be of service to my community? And if you're ready to retire, well, maybe this is for your nephew, your niece, or your son, or your daughter. Yeah. Right. This is a great project you could start on right today. Absolutely. And in order to finish what you're doing right now, let me just explain to the
audience. So once you get this complete outline, the best way then to have the AI engine fill out this course is to do it chapter by chapter. So to take chapter one, copy it, and then do a new prompt to say, you know, here's a chapter
for a course. I want you to fill this out, create the full coursework, add details, you know, and here's the chapter to use. Boom. You paste it in, you let that run, and it's going to build out the whole chapter for you. Right.
Yeah.
And you can do that in a new chat. You can, you can do it at any time. And so this is, it's already given us three, three different chapters. It'll go on for some time.
I also asked it. It's funny you said that. That was one of the first things I asked it. General purpose herbalism emergency kit. Oh, yeah, nice. And then, yeah, it's got, it's got a number of different things. And what, what, what type of application you should be looking at, like pharmacology, like the tincture, the dosage. So it's really cool. Yeah. You can give it, you can ask it for as much depth
or simplicity as you want. You can ask it, you can say, hey, take the herb time, tell me each of the chemical constituents in time, and tell me the disease prevention potential of each of those constituents. You could know your shit. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. You know how much it costs to be a naturopathic doctor in the U.S., Mike? I don't
your first year, just for your first year to be serious. Wow. I know, because I'm thinking about getting a degree in it. But every doctor I've talked to is like, with AI, I don't know. I don't know. It's going to change medicine so much. I mean, it doesn't replace a naturopath, just to be clear. But it empowers naturopaths and it
empowers the consumer or the patient to better understand their own challenges and also to, frankly, to clean up their food, their diet. You can research ingredients on there. It's very good at that. It knows every ingredient, even in personal care products, cosmetics, you name it. It knows it all in that area. That's
I feel like you could go to a store and I'm always shopping for like different face products or whatever, and I don't know half the stuff on the back of the bottle. So I could use my above phone, which I'll plug and I could literally ask for it. That'd be cool. Absolutely. You can, you know, what we've done in the online version, we have the ingredients analyzer. You just paste in a list of
a detailed breakdown of every ingredient, pros, cons, problems, benefits, everything, ingredient by ingredient. So if you paste in all the a big long list of ingredients. We had to actually increase the context length limits on that engine because it would throw back, you know, 100,000 tokens. Yeah, wow. Of all the details. Well, it's chicken nuggets. Chicken nuggets. They got a lot of ingredients in there. They work for you saying both,
though. Well, whatever. Yeah. But I mean, I think him having really long legs might have something to do with it as well. But anything that you want to know about food, herbs, medicine, essential oils, but also toxins in food and also everything about vaccines. Like, how about this?
Can you ask it a question? Sure. I think our audience might be skeptical. Let me, and have a new, a on a a GPU. Okay. So I'm not. It's awesome. Yeah. Magic's already there. Yeah, it's amazing. I mean, two years ago,
this was not possible. Yeah. All right. So ask it, tell me which vaccine ingredients are derived from aborted human fetal cell tissue. Now, if you ask that question on Chat GPT, it's going to lecture you about how great vaccines are. Oh, my God. Or it'll say that's a conspiracy theory. There
are no ingredients derived from aborted human fetal tissue. It's straight out lying. That's a lie.
And you know what? There's probably some poor AI engineer in the back room somewhere who they yell at him when it tells
And you have to sit there and train this thing. It cannot tell people the truth. Well, I mean, I don't mean to make this political, but even the truth about the history of geopolitics or Israel, for example. If your AI engine simply tells the truth about the USS Liberty, you're going to get censored and banned and then someone's going to scream, you got to
reprogram you can't tell the truth or 9-11 or vaccines or whatever or jfk assassination you know you name it right you name it and the powers that be want to control the conversation but how how's the answer so far on the aborted human fetal tissue question? Let's see. So it's talking about the most well-known vaccines from those sources. It's talking about the H-E-K 293
line in 1973, which took cultured kidney sales taken from an aborted baby, known as W4, which were obtained during the first trimester. It was used in the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.
Okay, hold on. I'm going to do something and fact check this. Okay. Because this is important. This is an important part of your own learning process. H-A-K-293, COVID-19, mRNA vaccine. I'm surprised it didn't focus on WI-38 or MRC-5.
Those are the two best known.
But I'm pretty sure it'll mention those.
Probably will mention those.
Yeah, most definitely.
So, H-E-K.
Cool.
So I'm looking on this website right now.
Take this for what it's worth.
But it is...
talking about HEK 293 cells and its derivatives. And see if it mentions mRNA. Modern mRNA and viral vector vaccines often utilize HEK cells. There we go. Confirmed. Fact-checked. Yep.
Yep. Well, I'm not surprised. I actually, there are really cool ways to use this engine to do recursive fact-checking loops and things like that. It's really strong. Yeah. And so we've got JNJ, COVID-19 viral vector vaccines, the Shingles vaccine. Oh, joy. Yeah.
In case you wanted to inject other people's babies, there's lots of vaccines to choose from. You know, on the way here, I saw these billboards about there's a lot of anti-abortion billboards, which now it's like opening my mind to like why there might be such an industry on it if it gets used in these things. Yeah, this is. Well, the FDA is
harvesting baby skulls. That's a fact. That all came out in the FOIA request. What are they using baby skulls for? Humanized mice experiments. They have to have certain tissues from baby brains
That all came out. I think Tom Fitton, his group got that out of FOIA requests, and the FDA had a full-time employee. Their job is to run around collecting aborted baby skulls. Oh, my God. Yeah. Can you imagine that being your job? It's like, what are you? I'm the bone collector. You know, I mean, what? That's a real thing.
I don't cry when the government shut down. I'm rejoicing. Have you seen this guy? Yeah, I know. I mean, the government does so like the FDA is a terrorist group. They run around collecting baby skulls. I mean, we don't need that. That's insane.
It's inverted. It's inverted. Yeah. If you stop most government agencies, life gets better for most Americans. Even with the snap thing, I mean, it's only potentially a problem because so many people are dependent on it. And I kind of the beauty in that.
but if you transmute that energy, you get 40 million Americans gardening, then we can really change the. Yeah, let's talk about that for a second because, I mean, I don't want and I know you don't either. But our government trapped people in a system of dependence on food stamps that are mostly used to purchase processed junk food that makes you sick and gives you cancer and so on and
diabetes. And the government has censored people like me who were trying to teach Americans how to be healthier and more self-reliant. The government has, and local governments, they have regulated home gardening.
They've arrested people for having a garden on their own property. Yeah. It's, oh, you can't have a garden in your front yard. You're like, your neighbors don't want to see it.
Yeah. Well, screw those neighbors.
I'm growing tomatoes, man. Yeah.
You know what I'm saying? On and on and on, the government created this situation where people are dependent on factory processed foods. So, and also the food stamp program is corporate welfare for the Walmarts and the banks that run the credit card commerce transactions.
They make money on that and the processed food companies and then the pharmaceutical companies that make all the money treating all the diseases caused by the food. It's corporate welfare. That's a really, really important point. Because, I mean, I think people mainly focus their frustration with people who have become dependent on it. And they're like, well, you know, these people are lazy, but we're also not thinking about the corporations on the other end. And corporations want the people dependent on it because the corporations and the banks profit.
And they're addicted. And it kills them over time, which maybe is part of this greater agenda. But that's why this model and what you have here with your above book, this is so cool because imagine if the knowledge of how to grow your own food and also how to make your own medicine, imagine if that knowledge
were freely available to everyone. Now it is. Now it is. And it's only limited by your imagination. That's right. Right, really. So I will bring the page back up for the sale here and chat a little bit about the special things we have. Oh, yeah, please do. So much outside of the AI that we can talk about, the privacy and security features that makes this phone just light years ahead of any iPhone or any Android phone. There's really I could talk about. We don't have time for that
I did do a webinar recently talking and the phones. So if you want to get the background, you'll see it here rise above the ecosystem overview. So check that out. There's more hands-on with all the other things you can do in the phone. This AI is such a beautiful part of it. And it's yet, it's one of the many things you can do on the phone and laptop.
So I encourage you, if you haven't heard about our products, to check that out.
Did you know, and is that on the abovephone.com slash Brighteon page? Yes, it is. Okay. So Aaron Day was recently at the Brownstone Institute event. Yes, I a talking avatar oh yeah did you know that that avatar every word that he spoke came from this engine i did not know that yeah aaron texted me he said look
i had your engine write the script and then i animated it with this avatar that's why that avatar made so much sense about medicine that was our engine that's amazing yeah i chatted with aaron and and he says he's working 16 hours a day on this AI stuff because he really believes that this is know, the general sentiment is people are scared of this. They think it's going to replace their jobs. No, this is going to level the playing field.
Well, I mean, I think it is going to replace a lot of jobs, can do a different job. You can do a higher level job with AI augmenting your capabilities. Yeah, right. You're capable of so much more. Right.
Like none of us are scribes. None of us are scribes. We're not like candlestick makers and scribes and what, because we're doing higher level jobs for the most part. Not that there's anything against a scribe or candlemaker. No, yes. Now I don't have an anti-scribe stance. Are you sure this wasn't a conspiracy to get rid of all the scribes? Yes. But throughout time, as more and more technology became available, people simply
upgraded their their roles in society to use that technology it's it's so true i i just finished a digital id report of the entire world i tried to do that that was very foolhardy because once you get to the third continent you're like oh my god if i didn't have AI to help me research and bounce ideas off, you know, take in mind, I never use its words or
in further to and have research. And that's the way you have to do it. You have to have balance, but it that maybe in the past a 10-person team would have worked on. And I did it. 100%. Yeah. Yeah. And it's really critical that people understand what AI is great at and also its limitations. So for
example, this model being that it's not online, it's not connected to the internet. Did you know that our model doesn't know what day it is? Right? It doesn't know. There's no way for it. How could it know? Right. It's just a vector database. Isn't that beautiful? It's infused with knowledge that's timeless, but it doesn't know what's happening with Trump's tariffs right now. To know that, you would
a model that searches the web, which is what Grok does or Chat GPT, et cetera. Or search engine. There's no reason. I mean, there's no technical reason preventing us from eventually building a version of this that does do that as well. Yeah, true. Absolutely. But then it wouldn't work offline in that mode. Yeah, it wouldn't be able to search the web. So that's a good distinction. It's not going to be
able to give you real-time information. It's everything that it's learned about. That's where it specializes. And so for this Black Friday sale, which we're running through November 14th, so there's 10 additional days you guys have. So we only have the phones on the site that will actually run this AI because that's what we felt. People are going to want to get the phones with the AIs on it. You can look at the other phones on the
the pixel 9 pro xl which is this one i've got in my hand here it's a it's a big phone about 6.8 inches of screen and 16 gigabytes of ram wow which is what you need to run a model the size i mean it almost takes up half of the RAM on this phone. Right, right. And it's a de-googled phone. I just want to be clear. It's a special OS. That's right. It's the above phone OS. Yes, it's a special OS that has no connections to Google or Apple. Perfect. But it takes a
lot of the lessons learned and it still has all the functions. So you have the things like Bluetooth, Hotspot, location, Wi-Fi. No problem. It has all of You can do those things. You can put in your SIM card. You can make calls. You can make texts. And you can get these new apps that will allow you to run AI, which by the way, in two years, you won't be able to do this because Google has already said we want to be in control of what apps you can install on a typical Android So that's right.
Yeah.
Google, Samsung, Xiaomi, any company that is officially Google licensed, you may not be able to install this app.
And that's like a real thing.
It's a real thing that's happening. That's already how it is on iPhone. And Google wants total control over the app environment. They want total control. They want to hold developers accountable if they step out of so they want people's uh id so in order to make an app that runs on big tech phones now you literally have to send them your id you also have to send them the master key to your app whoa so if they don't like what you're doing they can make the change for you and roll it out
everyone. So I say with like these phones and laptops, whether it's Google phones or Windows laptops, you're using a pre-hacked device. If you're telling me that someone can go on your computer without your knowledge or your consent and install shit there without you knowing about it or remove in the past, then your stuff is pre-hacked, right? This is why the submission is so important to me. That's why you have reliable critical to get away from Windows,
and that's why your above OS laptop is so good. And it's critical to get away from Google on the Android phones and get away from Apple, which has the same or many of the same issues. Although I think Google's worse than Apple. What's the discount during the Black Friday sale? These phones are $300 off. So check this one out. So the 9 Pro
XL is normally retails for $1,500. It's now $1,200. So that's $300 off. You can see it says Enoch capable. So we have the two phones that are Enoch capable at the top. That's the 9. Yeah. And that's the 9 Pro XL. You want to go for those if you want to run Enoch completely offline. And then you've got the 8 and the 7A. These are more of the budget models. And we have these listed because we have them in stock, but this is not going to be able
to run this is not going to be able to run the offline model it's probably going to seize up because it's going to take up all this you know we we tried to make a 7 billion parameter model and we had we failed at that so many times this 12 billion model turned out to be trainable in the way that we need needed. However, now that we have the NVIDIA Spark systems, you know, the what is it, the DGDX Spark, it
looks like we'll be able to train maybe a 3 billion parameter model using Spark. And if that's the case, I'll you. I would love that. And then we could see if that would probably run on the smaller phones. I And I want to get you a variety of models of different sizes ultimately is my goal. Yeah, we would love that. And so yeah, there's different models for different purposes. And with the Spark, you'll be able to
do the fine-tuning, which is really, really exciting. So we've got the phones up here. We also have two packs for the phones. This is really useful if you have someone in your life you want private communications there's nothing falling in between yourself. I talked to some doctors this weekend at Brownstone. I mean, those are people who are now working for the CDC, the NIH, because something is happening at the political level where these people
are being welcomed back, even though they were exiled once. Yeah. And I talked to some of these doctors. Sometimes, like, you know, they're married and for some reason, they can't communicate with each other. They're having all these weird phone issues. So I don't know why that is. I don't want to say anything specifically. But
in complete control of your communications, this is the best way to do it. Friends, families, loved ones, kids, parents, this is the phone to get. So you can get a two-pack of the 9 Pro and the 9 Pro XLs here, which would both be AI capable. I just had a silly thought. I'll come back to that, which would be to eventually create an AI assistant, which is also not unfeasible. And it could reply back to texts and
I think. That would be cool. Now, you also have voice recognition on the phones right now. I do. It works offline. Can you show that? Demo that? I will do that. So let me bring up. We've been looking at the laptop for a while. Let me bring up the phones version of the AI. This is so cool. Cause yeah, you can ask your prompt just with your voice and it's all offline. It doesn't use any cloud system to do this. That's right. Yeah. So, I mean,
Let's make it real, and I'm going to put the phone in airplane mode, so it's actually cut off from the internet.
All right.
Airplane mode is activated.
Cool.
Is everything looking good in the back end?
Yeah, we're seeing it. Okay, great.
So we can, so this is the app. It's called chatter UI here. And we've already got a chat going here with Enoch. Let's see. I think I can a new chat. Here we go. Great. New chat with Enoch. Okay. And then we've got the voice text. I originally wanted to
be a naturopathic doctor. Now I think AI can help me with everything. What should I know if I'm using AI to learn and build skills in naturopathic health? I don't know. It's kind of a general question.
So yeah, so first of all, what I just use is a free and open source offline model. Yeah.
That was really fast.
I mean.
And this is one of 14 languages.
I think it could do Chinese as well.
Wow. I tried to use it in Japan, and I was having people speak into it, and then it just came out of the Japanese characters, and I was like, all right, this is not.
Okay, cool.
But yes, so yes.
So you can talk to your phone.
You can be offline.
You can talk to ask it questions of our AI engine, and then just wait for the answer to be.
be generated. Exactly. Which, let's, can we see that? Let's send it off. All right. You're going to hit go. Enoch is typing. It's like when you're waiting for a girl to text you back. You're like, what's she going to say? What's she going to say? Okay.
So that's going to take a little while because it's slower on the phone than it is on the laptop, but it does run. It does run. It's amazing. I mean, a 12 billion parameter model running on a phone.
It's pretty nuts.
That was like unthinkable until recently.
And there you go.
This is some things I'm doing to speed up the performance.
Let's see if it runs.
What's that?
It's the cache of the chat and you can expand it.
So it keeps all of your chats in history. So and restart it, it should know. Okay. So is that prompt running? Oh, it's going. Yeah. It started. Token per second. There we go. Okay. Now it's, there we go.
It was a little shy. So it, yeah, I mean, how to process the input, and now it's starting the output. Look, you even call me by name, user. User, you exhibit a discerning approach to health and empowerment, recognizing AI, when wielded wisely, can serve as an extensive decentralized resource for naturopathic education. So to those watching, I just hope everybody understands this is the key to decentralization. Taking your power back, your privacy, knowledge at your fingertips,
knowledge on so many areas where we've trained our models, including gold and silver, crypto, privacy, crypto, honest money, the history of the Federal Reserve, everything. Plus all the other on your phone. You can carry around in your pocket, you know, like every encyclopedia set that's ever been published. And nothing can stop you. Right. Literally, nothing can stop you. And it's not in the cloud. It's not in the cloud.
You can recharge your phone or laptop with a solar array. What can really get in your way now? Yeah, this is incredibly empowering.
I mean, that's why I'm so thrilled that we could do this together. Me as well. It really feels like we're opening a new chapter. I mean, we're building this new earth. We haven't figured out much of anything yet, but we have figured out this part, which is exciting. Yeah, this is a big milestone. I mean, it took us a long time to
get to this point. And this wasn't, didn't seem like it was possible last year. It really didn't. Yeah. Okay, so let's wrap up this segment here. Can you give out the web address again? Sure. And I'll run through the sale one last time. Okay. By the way, it's telling me a lot of good stuff here. I'm going to switch back to my shooter so you guys can see it. It's talking about dynamic versus static knowledge. Does it say you're Mike Adams also?
I wish. I'm just going to say, call me Mike from now. Call me Mike. Yeah. Call me big Mike. All right. So, okay. So I think my display is back. So again, guys, the sale is broken up. This is going on until November 14th. Take advantage of it soon.
And again, while supplies last, we only have a limited number here in stock. We've got the 9 Pro XL and the 9. These are both Enoch capable. Then we have some phones that are not Enoch capable.
I'd say go for these ones. Remember, if the price tag scares you a little bit, we have payment plans.
So you can break this up into four or six payments. We can work with you on that. And you can also get these two packs. It might be a good idea, too, if you think in your local community, hey, this is going to be useful to put your money in together for something because now this is a resource that multiple people can use. Yeah. And what about the laptop? And the laptop, we have three different models of laptop that can all run this model with more or less the same amount of performance. There's no big difference there.
They all have 16 gigabytes of RAM. So we've got the Carbon. The one I'm using right now is more like the metal version of the a 2.33 pounds. It's got a touchscreen. It's got a special low blue light display for those of you who know about Jack Cruise and care about your eyes. It's a really good
computer to have, a very fast 11th generation processor and a great battery life as well. So it's a kind of a sleek, professional laptop. For those who want something a little bit cheaper, the magnesium is more blocky. And once you go in to select a laptop, you've got some options here. So you can choose how much storage you want on the drive. You can choose 500 gigabytes to four terabytes. It's just an extra charge for
And you'll have the option to put in full disk encryption. And guys, this is free. I recommend you do it no one can walk off with your computer and steal the data. There's also the option to get above privacy suite, which if you select this, you will get the ability to get your first
month free that happens on checkout. And you'll also need to put in your above book username here. That's your local username for the laptop. This is all explained as you go through it. I just wanted to share how you could do it. We accept cards. We accept cash. We accept barter.
We've sold phones and laptops for gold and silver before. Thank you guys for those of you that have done that. It's great. It worked out for us. And so you can also get two packs of the laptops. And lastly, where is the combo? Where is the combo? Did we run out of the combo? We will put a combo here. There's also a combo product of the phone and the laptop that's really cheap. I got to put this back here on the site. But by the time you get to your website, maybe in an hour
be on there. We also have Data Sims. This is private data that you can use anywhere in the world. We've got plans in different continents. And you can always talk to us if you have questions. Just use this button here to chat with us. And we've got people standing by, real people, not AI, not AI.
Oh, my. Although we are working on an AI to learn everything it can about our products for faster answers. To help, yeah, of course. Exactly. Okay. All right. So that's all available at abovephone.com slash Brighteon.
That's right, abovephone.com slash Brighteon.
It'll be going on this month while supplies last.
While supplies last, yeah, exactly.
Okay, well, Hakeem, this has been a blast to go over this with you and to give the demonstration.
Flawless.
I just want to thank you for coming here today. And I can't wait to see what we're going to do over the next year with more models. And, you know, hey, models are getting faster. Hardware is getting upgraded phones are getting more powerful this is just the beginning of where this is going so i'm so excited yeah to see this thing now working in the open it's the best solution anyone can use for ai today and so yeah honored to be your partner
in this. Well, thank you, Hakeem. We're honored to work with you. And thank all of you for watching today here. This has been our very first interview here in person in our new studio. Hope you like it. And I hope you take advantage of this Black Friday sale on the above phone hardware pre-installed with our AI engine, as you just saw. It's a game changer for human knowledge. You do not want to face the apocalypse without our AI engine downloaded and installed on your computer, your laptop,
a lifesaver in terms of knowledge. Enoch AI, the the name Enoch, by the way, for next year because we the domain name Enoch.ai. We have Brighteon.ai. We just called this version Enoch. We're going to have a new name for next year. I don't even know what that is yet, but the
place to go to always download it is Brighteon.ai, and that'll forward you and you can download the model completely free of charge. It's non-commercial.
All right. So thanks for joining us today. And thank you, Hakeem, for being here.
Thank you.
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